NPL's commercial services are built on 100 years of leadership in accuracy, innovation and scientific research. Experienced consultants and project managers draw upon a unique combination of industry know-how and world-leading scientific discovery to deliver real-world business solutions and enable innovation and secure competitive advantage.

We strive to actively promote public awareness and appreciation of science and technology, particularly the importance of measurement and the role of NPL. Here you can find out more about the interesting things we do, science outreach activities you can get involved in or take a look at some of our educational resources.

What does my image really mean?

An invited paper by researchers from the National Physical Laboratory (NPL) examines one of the most significant unresolved issues in secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS): the matrix effect.

Mass spectrometry images provide a wonderful means of visualising molecules with high sensitivity, excellent specificity and in a label-free manner. They are rich in information and useful as a guide to the location of molecules in a sample.

However, their seductive power and beauty can lead weak minds astray. The most common pitfall is to believe that an increased intensity in an image can be interpreted as an increase in concentration of the molecule in the sample. More often than not this is true, occasionally it is decidedly false. The culprit is the shady and impish paramour of surface mass spectrometry: the notorious and badly understood 'matrix effect'.

To investigate this effect, NPL has generated mixed reference materials of well-known composition and studied them using SIMS. Some of the ions, such as the fluoride ions shown in the figure, have an intensity proportional to the composition. Others are not, such as the acetate ions in the figure which arise from the second component in the mixture. NPL's work, published as an invited paper in a special issue of the International Journal of Mass Spectrometry entitled 'MS 1960 to Now' is the first serious investigation of the matrix effect in organic secondary ion mass spectrometry.

This work will lead to a greater understanding of how to extract reliable compositional data from imaging mass spectrometry, as well as understanding how the infamous matrix effect may be turned to some use. This apparently shifty character is not actually evil, just in need of some attention and understanding. For example, the researchers point out that different ions display different matrix effects and this could be used to identify nanoscale phase separation of materials in secondary ion mass spectrometry. This is demonstrated in the figure, which shows how the data from a depth profile provides information on both a 'composition' and a 'separation' scalebar.